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Rubio may have quenched GOP’s thirst for fresh face

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(MCT) — PALM BEACH, Fla.—Does Florida Sen. Marco Rubio have the bipartisan appeal to succeed on the national stage?

Does he have the salivary glands?

Those were among the questions ricocheting Wednesday after potential 2016 presidential candidate and Time magazine-anointed “Republican Savior” Rubio delivered Tuesday night’s GOP response to President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address.

Rubio’s 15-minute speech lauded free enterprise and limited government, called for a “responsible, permanent solution” on immigration and warned against “unconstitutionally undermining” the Second Amendment.

But what instantly set the Internet ablaze was the junior senator’s bout with xerostomia, or dry mouth, about 11 minutes into his remarks and his awkward lunge for an off-camera water bottle to slake his thirst.

Internet wags quickly gave the episode labels like “watergate” or “aqua lunge” or “the Big Gulp.”

Rubio poked fun at himself afterward, immediately posting a picture of the 8-ounce Poland Spring bottle on Twitter and hoisting bottled water during network TV appearances Wednesday morning.

“I needed water — what am I going to do? You know, it happens. God has a funny way of reminding us we’re human,” a smiling Rubio said on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”

The Democratic National Committee, which held a conference call Monday to rip Rubio in advance of his speech, slammed Rubio again Wednesday. The DNC news release featured a picture of a Poland Spring bottle — but said Rubio’s problems went beyond dry mouth.

“It wasn’t just about the famous water lunge,” said the DNC release. “Sen. Marco Rubio’s response to the State of the Union was most notable for how much it sounded like the very same failed policies that Republicans have been running on for years if not decades – the same failed set of ideas that Mitt Romney ran for president on just last year as the GOP’s standard-bearer.”

Republican consultant David Johnson of Tallahassee agreed that Rubio didn’t break new policy ground, but said what was more significant was that the GOP presented a fresh face and that Rubio further introduced himself to people outside Florida.

“Consider the messenger. … It wasn’t so much a case of new policy or new proposals. He is a new person to an awful lot of people — Republicans and independents and Democrats, as well, who are going to be determining who is going to be the next president,” Johnson said.

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